Sometimes you just have to bang away and hope for the best: Ketut’s benighted, bobbing and weaving miniature squid

Always thoughtful and focused, Ketut personifies the commitment of the Wakatobi photo dive guides. It is largely their experience and local
knowledge that brings to light the diversity of marine life on these incredible reefs. Photo by Robyn Hughes

Red Whip Ambush: This image, taken at Wakatobi, was the winner of the Australian Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year Animal Portrait
category for 2016

Wakatobi dive sight

It's dark. Out of the gloom, Ketut's slate suddenly materializes in front of my face, weakly illuminated in the few rays escaping between the
fingers he’d curled over the lens of his dive light to protect my night vision. He’d written one question on it. ‘Bobtail?’ It was a classically
understated question. What Ketut had found in the blackness — and was asking me if I wanted to photograph—was a juvenile bobtail
squid, about a fifth of an inch long.

The miniscule squid was hunting around a hydroid, seemingly picking off pixel-sized crustaceans. It was flitting around, on a jutting corner
of reef, and being swirled randomly back and forth, up and down, by the eddies of a current that, in open water, was almost too strong
to swim against.

That Ketut even found it in the first place was impressive enough. But then he turned and led me back through the darkness and the current,
and somehow relocated it. There followed 20 minutes of that cramping exertion all too familiar to underwater macro photographers when the
only thing not moving is the reef itself.

Ketut sidled in like a living beanbag to help brace me against the current. With legs and fins pumping, the lens locked at its closest focus
to stop it hunting, trying to hold the camera steady, neck craned, squinting hard through the viewfinder hoping to find the squid, I eventually
resorted to just squeezing off a frame every time something—anything—blundered into focus.

Earlier that same day, I’d spent at least 10 minutes staring at a hand-sized patch of algae-fuzzed coral after Ketut had casually pointed into
the centre of it. With my face close enough to the coral to allow the prescription gauge reader lenses in my mask to do their job, I finally
detected the millimetric movement of a perfectly camouflaged juvenile triplefin. Ketut had seen it as he swam past!

Twenty minutes later, Ketut taps his tank with his reef pointer. Holding his magnifying glass in front of his face—and not taking his
eyes from whatever he has found on the reef—he beckons to me with his free hand. Ketut is calling me over to tackle something with
the unforgiving Nauticam SMC super-macro rig that even his laser-sharp eyes can see only with the aid of a magnifying glass. All this because
I’d suggested that we might go look for super-macro subjects. You have to be careful what you wish for.

Ketut and the other members of the dive guide team at Wakatobi Dive Resort listen intently to their clients’ photographic aspirations. They
take these aspirations seriously and work hard to help fulfill them. Over the course of more than 250 dives at Wakatobi Dive Resort, I
have worked with Ketut, Shoko, Jono, Yusef, Kaz, Muji, and Marco Fierli, who is also Wakatobi Resort’s photo pro and a talented shooter
in his own right. They all bring their own personalities and strengths to the relationship they forge with their clients. But they all
have in common a deep local knowledge and a systematic approach to finding subjects, either from their clients’ wish lists, or opportunistically,
based on their own searches and observations.

Taking the private guide option to tap into this catalogue of knowledge and experience does add to the cost of a Wakatobi visit, but you won’t
regret it. On the regularly scheduled dive boats, you’ll still go to sea with the larger groups of divers, but you’ll be dropped on your
own sections of reef, with your guide, to work undisturbed. Alternatively, you can work the House Reef with them at any time.

"The ultimate benefit comes though with the private guide/private boat option. While this does increase your costs, it provides the most freedom
and flexibility, and is well worth the investment. With the private boat you dive when you want, where you want, as frequently as you want.
There’s no call to abandon a subject and move on, simply because others in the group have.

There's no-one else pressing you from behind for their turn to take a photograph. It’s the ideal way to really get to know an area in detail.
It’s also ideal for building portfolios of specific species over extended periods of time. We use it for all these reasons.

All the photographs we take are made available free of charge for any non-commercial uses related to research, education, or conservation.
We routinely share them with whale and cephalopod scientists in various parts of the world. For access to these shots, please click here to contact us.